How to Design a Set: Mad Men and Scandal -- Vulture
The Americans: Richard Patterson’s D.C. apartment
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3KRWR$QGUHZ%DVHPDQ Silk-Screened ’70s Mirror: Baseman picked this up at a thriftstore in New Jersey for $5. “You can’t assume Patterson redecorated in/LNHPRVWRIXV KHGLGLW¿YHRUWHQ\HDUVDJR´
Shiny Furniture: Patterson is a womanizer, so his apartmentneeded to look a little sleazy. Chrome surfaces and that front-and-centeranimal print suggest bachelor pad.
Vintage Television: “It came with the owner’s manual and theRULJLQDO FOXQN\UHPRWHZKLFK\RXVHHRQWKHFRɣHHWDEOH´%DVHPDQVD\Vof the 1979 set, How to Design a Set: Madwhich Men andhe Scandal found -- Vulturein mint condition at an antiques shop inBrooklyn. At $200, it was cheaper than renting a comparable modelfrom a prop house for a week.
The Americans: Zhukov’s Bedroom in Russia, 1981
3KRWR Andrew Baseman
1. Tacky Wallpaper Zhukov’s bedroom is actually a room inside a Brooklyn funeral home; the space had just the sort of garish wallpaper Baseman needed. “If someone called this tasteful, I’d be a little worried.”
2. Red Bedding “We almost always use red for the Russians,” Baseman How to Design a Set: Mad Men and Scandal -- Vulture says. “I wanted the furniture to be over-the-top to show Zhukov’s wealth.”
The Americans: KGB Tearoom in Russia, 1964
3KRWR Andrew Baseman
1. Lenin Wall Art “Anything you hang you have to get clearance for,” Baseman explains. “The exceptions are antiques, anything pre-copyright. So all the paintings that look antique are antique.” But this portrait of Lenin? It’s a blown-up image (purchased from a photo service) mounted on foam board.
2. Red Rug This was another thrift-store bargain ($65), especially since Baseman can reuse it. “Rugs I’ll use over and over again. A lot of times you just see a little piece of it; it’s innocuous enough.”